Since it was formed in 2004, on the recommendation of
the 9/11 Commission, The Privacy
and Civil Liberties Oversight Board has been blasted
by civil libertarians as a tool of the administration, more interested
in whitewashing War on Terror–related privacy violations than serving
as a genuine check on government intrusion. One of the board's five
members even resigned
in protest, citing among other things "the vast array of alphabet
soup agencies and bureaucracies in the national security apparatus"
that sought "to control
and modify the Board's public utterances." So last year, Congress
sought to give the board greater autonomy by moving it out from under
the aegis of the White House and reconstituting itself as an independent
boad within the executive branch. The response of the White House, Wired
reports, has been to drag
its feet in appointing a new board -- meaning there is no one
on the board as of January 30th -- prompting bipartisan criticism
from top members of the Senate's Homeland Security Committee.
The board's second annual
report (pdf), released late last month, does not exactly inspire
confidence in its assiduousness as a privacy watchdog -- even when staffed.
After touting its excellent working relationship with the White House,
it moves to a "nothing to see here" review of the post-9/11 use of the
material witness statute (MWS) as a detention tool. Aside from one "terrible
mistake," the report asserts the board "was not made aware of specific
problems with the use of the MWS in the anti-terrorism context" and
cites a claim by the Justice Department that "on only nine occasions
since the attacks of September 11, 2001 has the MWS been used in terrorist-related
investigations." That is hard to square with the findings of a joint
report by Human Rights Watch and the American Civil Liberties Union,
which found some 70 instances of 9/11-related detention, though the
discrepancy may be explained by the frequent use of immigration violations
as a pretext for detentions that were actually related to terror investigations.
The board's analysis of the Protect America Act, passed last August,
similarly reads like a compilation of White House talking points.
This should not be all that surprising given the composition of the
old board, which consisted of such Republican stalwarts as President
Bush's former solicitor general, Ted
Olson. With debate over reforms to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act raging in the Senate, the White House appears less than eager to
have a less-friendly set of eyes reviewing its surveillance policies.